Australian Inventions That Changed The World!! (BRITISH REACTION)

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  • Опубликовано: 8 мар 2023
  • Australian Inventions That Changed The World!! BRITISH REACTION
    This is my reaction to Australian Inventions That Changed The World
    Original Video - • The most AMAZING Austr...
    #australia #inventions #reaction
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    British Reaction To Australian Inventions

Комментарии • 600

  • @shaz464
    @shaz464 Год назад +175

    In my opinion, the cochlear ear implant should be in the top ten.

    • @caro.k2958
      @caro.k2958 Год назад +11

      That and the pacemaker! 😂

    • @Parth-gd9vz
      @Parth-gd9vz Год назад +4

      100% … on both accounts 👍🏼

    • @LightFigure888
      @LightFigure888 Год назад +3

      Also the technology to prevent motion sickness in users of virtual reality.

    • @renzy5270
      @renzy5270 10 месяцев назад

      Was waiting for it

    • @NorseNyanCat
      @NorseNyanCat 9 месяцев назад

      Yeah, I figured cochlears would be on this list and went to comments to see if anyone mentioned it when it wasn’t, I don’t actually know how well known even the existence of them is, I’m hard of hearing so obviously i know about it being in the community, but every now and then I’ll even have family members not understand what I’m talking about with this sort of stuff.

  • @necianicholas2878
    @necianicholas2878 Год назад +139

    The Dual Flush toilet is an Aussie invention, now used around the world.

    • @elizabethscott7660
      @elizabethscott7660 Год назад +13

      Before the dual flush we invented the 'brick in the cistern flush'. 😂😂

    • @necianicholas2878
      @necianicholas2878 Год назад +4

      Yes, we were a family of 10 & Dad put a brick in the cistern back in the 60s to save water. 😊

    • @MelodyMan69
      @MelodyMan69 Год назад +1

      Prince Charles, at the time, was impressed but not sure how to use it. Go figure.

    • @BC-op7rj
      @BC-op7rj Год назад

      Actually conceived in Japan, but never mastered or commercialised because they did not have the water shortages, so such a concept was useless to them. Chroma perfected it. Apparently no 1 overseas customer was Israel.

    • @chuckmaddison2924
      @chuckmaddison2924 Год назад

      We created it to help get rid of the Valiant.

  • @ninjajuggalo187
    @ninjajuggalo187 Год назад +187

    The Bunnings sausage sizzle has to be one of the best things Australia has invented

  • @brianmcdonnell6758
    @brianmcdonnell6758 Год назад +207

    The Jaws of Life, used to cut cars open following crashes, Pacemaker, a Scotsman discovered Penicillin, but it was an Aussie who perfected purification of Penicillin, the Bionic Ear, the Winged Keel which enabled Australia to win the America's Cup. Just a few Aussie inventions.

    • @davidl707
      @davidl707 Год назад +25

      Yep, would've thought the cochlear implant(bionic ear) wouldve ranked higher than Google maps, or even the electric drill

    • @utha2665
      @utha2665 Год назад +9

      @Michael Rogers Yes, Sir Alexander Fleming discovered it but was unable to manufacture it, the discovery sat for 10 years until Florey assembled a team from Oxford University. Another person who was probably responsible for the manufacturing and purification method was Norman Heatley, an Englishman. It was his suggestion that was used to manufacture penicillin in a pure enough form suitable for consumption. But it was a team effort, for sure and I guess the leader of the group gets the accolades of a huge team effort. I suppose if it weren't for Florey then Penicillin would have sat dormant for another 10 years.

    • @karenstrong8887
      @karenstrong8887 Год назад +4

      Baby capsules, car seats and toddlers seat. Seat belts and I could go on.

    • @Rivighi
      @Rivighi Год назад +12

      Mate you forgot the best on the hills hoist

    • @jamescollins8397
      @jamescollins8397 Год назад +8

      @@Rivighi ... & the Victa lawnmower, the pacemaker, spray on skin, the Triton work bench, the Frazier lens, dual flush toilet, & the list goes on. .

  • @touchofgrayphotos
    @touchofgrayphotos Год назад +4

    Don't forget McCafe started in Melbourne, and now has gone worldwide, it took an Aussie to combine a cafe with ya burger!

  • @jemor2143
    @jemor2143 Год назад +169

    Some lesser known ones to add are... the wine cask, full length feature films and the first movie film, plastic spectacle lens, multifocal contact lens, spray on skin (burns patients), anti flu medication and cervical cancer vaccine... so many, too many to name here. Thanks for sharing.

    • @lesleyking4059
      @lesleyking4059 Год назад +19

      Cochlear hearing aids too

    • @linesydclb8845
      @linesydclb8845 Год назад +14

      the cause and treatment of stomach ulcers, rotary clothes hoist, victa mower. The first vapour refrigerator was invented by a Scottish Australian

    • @sharronbrennon899
      @sharronbrennon899 Год назад

      Wine casks were around before Australia was even settled by the the Europeans. But back then the casks were made out of wood

    • @jemor2143
      @jemor2143 Год назад +11

      @@sharronbrennon899 I'm guessing you don't understand what they are. They are about 4lts plastic insert in a cardboard box that you buy for yourself that you can pour wine from. Not the wine barrels they distill wine in, so no they weren't around before settlement.

    • @sharronbrennon899
      @sharronbrennon899 Год назад +2

      @@jemor2143 i knew what you meant. My brother would buy goon sacks all the time. But what you said was wine cask and not plastic wine sack which is pretty vague since more than plastic sacks can be a cask. And I wasn’t talking about the massive wooden barrels that they make wine in i was referring to the smaller wooden barrels that they transport wine in. Which is also called a cask. Even the massive barrels are called casks

  • @lbd-po7cl
    @lbd-po7cl Год назад +144

    You had me bristling at the start with the “Scottish invention of penicillin” comment😀! Fleming may have stumbled across the mould and it’s properties, but it was Australian Howard Florey who refined the mould and turned it into a usable medicine. Both Fleming and Florey, as well as German Ernst Chain were awarded the Nobel Prize for it, but people only ever seem to remember Fleming, sadly. So it really should be remembered as a joint Scottish, Australian and German invention - each played distinct but important roles, dependent on one another.
    Yes, WiFi. Not many people realize that one.

    • @cgkennedy
      @cgkennedy Год назад +10

      CSIRO took Microsoft to court for not paying royalties to them for appropriating wifi as their invention. Had to pay CSIRO big bickies in compensation.

    • @leglessinoz
      @leglessinoz Год назад +3

      Technically the CSIRO made wifi reliable. They didn't invent wifi.

    • @martinwallace5734
      @martinwallace5734 Год назад +7

      Yes, (the Scot) Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin but (the Australian) Howard Florey and (Jewish German refugee) Ernst Chain headed up a team of (British) scientists funded by the (American) Rockefeller Foundation isolated it and devised a way of growing it in large quantities suitable for use in humans. It was thus a multi-national collaborative effort. Fleming, Florey and Chain shared the Nobel Prize.

    • @neild3074
      @neild3074 Год назад

      @@leglessinoz Then who did?

    • @Michael-D.-Williams
      @Michael-D.-Williams Год назад +3

      @@leglessinoz You know wifi is short for wireless fidelity? Making it reliable is the fidelity bit. There's no wifi without the fi.

  • @ianmontgomery7534
    @ianmontgomery7534 Год назад +42

    the Australian invention that has helped the world the most is the thin latex glove that are used by everyone from doctors to mechanics. They were invented by Ansell who wanted to diversify from making condoms.

  • @kennethdodemaide8678
    @kennethdodemaide8678 Год назад +67

    There are hundreds of inventions by Australians. This video didn't even mention refrigeration, the bionic ear, motorised lawn mower, IVF, ETC. The Scotsman didn't create the penicillin serum, he only discovered penicillin by accident. Howard Florey was the one who created the serum and was awarded the Nobel Prize for his work.

    • @kennethdodemaide8678
      @kennethdodemaide8678 Год назад +5

      @michaelrogers2080 Fleming didn't think penicillin had any practical use. It was Florey who saw the possible medical applications and assembled a team of scientists, including Chain, that he led to develop the serum. The ancient Romans used mouldy bread to apply to soldiers' wounds to fight infection. They should be acknowledged as the discoverers of penicillin.

    • @Michael-D.-Williams
      @Michael-D.-Williams Год назад

      @@kennethdodemaide8678 Florey assembled that team in Britain, after he'd been away from Australia for decades. All the penicillin work was done in Britain, funded by the British Government and later some other investors. Florey was Australian, but its not an Australian invention.

    • @ingridclare7411
      @ingridclare7411 Год назад

      @@Michael-D.-Williams The way Australia and Britain were interlocked back then says it was as Australian as it was British. Hell, people still called Britain 'home' in 1945. My grandmother used to.

    • @Michael-D.-Williams
      @Michael-D.-Williams Год назад

      @@ingridclare7411 You reckon the Brits felt that way about Australia? That this was an Australian invention? Not a chance. Would you say every invention made by British emigres to Australia was a British invention as much as it was Australian? I dunno - maybe you're just more generous in giving out credit than I am.

  • @johndavid9418
    @johndavid9418 Год назад +38

    The Hills Hoist was developed in Adelaide, South Australia by World War II veteran Lance Hill in 1945.
    July 20, 1969 An Aussie sheep station picked up transmissions & broadcast mans 1st step on the moon to the world.

    • @Areyousayingidontknowmyname
      @Areyousayingidontknowmyname 10 месяцев назад +1

      Actually a few inventions i had no idea from country areas of South Australia. But my main reason for dropping into this comment is the Hills Hoist may not have been the first. There are earlier American advertizings of something very similar.

    • @johndavid9418
      @johndavid9418 10 месяцев назад

      @@Areyousayingidontknowmyname And the Nazis & German scientists designed & built the Saturn 5 & ran NASA for decades under the Nazi Werner Von Braun.
      Americans didn't take us to the Moon, German Nazis took men of European decent to the Moon, they just happened to launch from North America.
      Americans try to take credit for everything.
      In fact the clothes line was invented thousands of years ago, it was called " A rope tied between 2 trees".
      Sorry, I'm feeling a little sarcastic today☮

    • @terryt2897
      @terryt2897 Месяц назад

      It was actually picked up by a space dish on a hill near the town of Carnarvon in WA The timing of the moon landing meant the Us and others were facing away from the moon at the crucial moment.

  • @anonymous91877
    @anonymous91877 Год назад +8

    Did you know Australian currency is designed to be distinguishable for the blind. Each note is a specific size that can go into special wallets or devices that contain Braille so you can tell the note by which Braille slot it can fit into. And each coin is designed not only using special sizes you can distinguish but there are ridges on the size that have patterns to help the blind tell them apart.

  • @necianicholas2878
    @necianicholas2878 Год назад +31

    Australia also invented the '8 hour work day', and the word 'Selfie'. 😊

  • @michealbohmer2871
    @michealbohmer2871 Год назад +49

    Other inventions: Cochlear Implant, rotary lawn mower, spray on skin, refrigerator (a Scottish born Australian named James Harrison), electronic pacemaker, winged keel, permaculture, plastic spectacle lenses, permanent crease clothing, cervical cancer vaccine, Frazier Lense, the notepad, splayds, dual flush toilet.

    • @Nathan-ry3yu
      @Nathan-ry3yu Год назад +4

      You forget the Army tank also. But it was the British who ended up developing the first tank due to costs.

    • @David_P132
      @David_P132 Год назад +1

      I wouldn't mention splayds mate.

    • @25emann
      @25emann Год назад +2

      @@David_P132 I have, and use, splayds... they are great.

    • @25emann
      @25emann Год назад

      @@Nathan-ry3yu not just the tank (but also made Shermans, in WWll useful by upgunning the US tank with a British field gun. It was called Firefly, built by the Brits. The only thing that could blow the top off big German tanks until the US Pershing arrived in 1945), but the torpedo also.

    • @David_P132
      @David_P132 Год назад

      @@25emann Cut the inside of your cheek!

  • @ianmaher4348
    @ianmaher4348 Год назад +22

    James Harrison invented the world's first commercial refrigeration in Victoria Australia, to make ice. He was born in Scotland so we can share this one.

  • @malcolmrayner3480
    @malcolmrayner3480 Год назад +13

    The Crane you see on top of all the high rise buildings is called the Kangaroo crane and invented in Aussie

  • @stanleywiggins5047
    @stanleywiggins5047 Год назад +14

    That heavy industrial bearing invented by an Aussie back in the late 1800s, there is one from that time in a hydro power station in the USA that the maintenance engineer said "with proper maintenance it should last 1,000 years,!"

  • @BillSaltbush
    @BillSaltbush Год назад +3

    Another Aussie, a bloke also called Sullivan, invented the 'continuous positive air pressure' (CPAP) machine. Since 1980, it has turned around and saved the lives of millions who suffer/ed with sleep apnoea.

  • @lonnie224
    @lonnie224 Год назад +53

    Yes Australians invented all of these things and a lot more. We didnt get to where we are by sitting around waiting for something. We made it happen, pretty resourceful bunch, us Aussies. 😎🇦🇺

    • @jemxs
      @jemxs Год назад +2

      I'm Aussie but I haven't invented anything 😝

    • @kcharles8857
      @kcharles8857 Год назад +3

      @@jemxs Then get out there an invent :)

    • @jemxs
      @jemxs Год назад +2

      @@kcharles8857 haha 😂

    • @bushranger51
      @bushranger51 Год назад +5

      Yes it makes me so proud to be an Aussie, we don't usually beat our own drum like a lot of others, we just get on with it and worry about the bureaucracy later.

    • @lunsmann
      @lunsmann Год назад +7

      Aussies invent things, then have to go overseas to get those inventions developed and to market. Short sighted governments won't fund them, and small minded business owners can't see the long term profits - only immediate profit interests most Aussie business types. Very few Aussie inventions have been developed and marketed here.

  • @matthewwakefield6321
    @matthewwakefield6321 Год назад +4

    Breathable contact lenses (multi day leave in), PERC solar cells (dominant technology used today), vanadium flow batteries (just starting to make commercial impact but will be big is stationary storage), solar hot water, the scramjet, and the cervical cancer vaccine are ones I cant see mentioned elsewhere. Refrigerator still probably the most impactful and life saving of the lot.

    • @warchief1015
      @warchief1015 4 месяца назад

      didn't invent the scram jet, we were the first to make one work, for 1 million dollars after the yanks had failed with 6 billion dollars and then our govt gave it to the seppos.

  • @clivegilbertson6542
    @clivegilbertson6542 Год назад +21

    G'day Mate! And Aussies have made enormous contributions to medical health affecting millions! Like the discovery that the "helicobacter" as the cause of most stomach ulcers...The HPV vaccine...Amongst so many others...Cheers!

  • @littleflick
    @littleflick Год назад +47

    You’ll notice that the CSIRO (Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation) was involved in a couple of these discoveries. It used to be very well funded and a world leading organisation. Unfortunately they have had their budget slashed more recently. So I feel we are less likely to be world leaders in scientific research for much longer. One of my friends works for them quite high up in the meteorological department, and has on and off most of her career. They are working with a fraction of their previous staffing levels.

    • @jasveender
      @jasveender Год назад +9

      Such a loss for us! The CSIRO should be well supported and funded to do science and research that are not solely for profit / share holder driven ...

    • @damiangordon8893
      @damiangordon8893 Год назад +6

      the csiro needs to be funded to keep up the the great work they have been doing

    • @jaykeinnes6793
      @jaykeinnes6793 Год назад +7

      Science isnt liked much these days, we seem to have forgotten biology

    • @pauldobson2529
      @pauldobson2529 Год назад

      The previous LNP government directed them to steer away from stuff like climate science because it didn’t fit with their ideology. It also seemed that they wanted the CSIRO to sell inventions, presumably to their supporters, when the royalties would have kept the CSIRO very profitable.

    • @1337flite
      @1337flite Год назад

      DSTO (or whatever it is called now) however is super well funded and getting more funding. Research in Universities is pretty underfunded these days, although I expect thgat we'll see a lot of funding over the next decade or two as we commission these nuclear subs and as "sovereign" Defence is currently the big deal.

  • @julieeverett7442
    @julieeverett7442 Год назад +9

    and QANTAS , the first commercial airline, the name itself stands for Queensland and Northern Territory Air Service, and it has recently had its 100th Anniversary

    • @majorlaff8682
      @majorlaff8682 Год назад +2

      'Aerial' not 'Air'. Sadly, it's crash landing at the moment.

    • @julieeverett7442
      @julieeverett7442 Год назад +1

      @@majorlaff8682 I stand corrected

    • @majorlaff8682
      @majorlaff8682 Год назад

      @@julieeverett7442 Nah, no need. Sit down, chuck a sickie, have a day off to recover.

    • @adrianlemke9965
      @adrianlemke9965 Год назад

      The first airline was DELAG, founded in Germany in 1909. They operated zeppelins. The first fixed wing Airline was St Petersberg-Tampa Airboat line in 1914, Florida. The earliest in Europe was was Aircraft Transport and Travel in 1916. This airline was the forerunner of what would later be known as British Airways. The oldest continuously operating airline in the world is the Dutch carrier KLM.

  • @Wok86
    @Wok86 Год назад +18

    Everyone here is noting down the more impressive Aussie inventions but something that's a bit more mundane (but still used quite a lot), is the glue-bound notepad/writing-pad. It believe it was developed by a stationery maker in Tasmania in the early 1900's. (Or something like that.)
    Something way more important and quite a bit more recent (1993) was the 'spray-on skin' treatment/technique for burn victims. Also from memory, there were some shenanigans about it's early use but it eventually got cleared for use in a few places.
    I remember in school - I can't remember what subject it was, but this quote was hammered in all the time: "Necessity is the mother of all invention". Living in a place like early Australia, I believe that was definitely the case.

  • @tomwareham7944
    @tomwareham7944 Год назад +41

    The invention of thr non returnable Boomerang commonly known as a stick was invented by an Australian indigenous person 45,000 yrs ago he also invented the bagless bagpipe known locally as a Digeridoo . More recent inventions include the left handed screwdrivers, Sriped paint, Knacker Lacquer(which adds luster to your cluster) and the footlong Condom , which was only a hit in Australia , we also invented more mundane things like the motor mower the rotary cloths line , the 40 hr working week the Neoprene stubby holder , casked wine and the selfie ,I could go on but I'm too busy invented shit , my current projects are the self peeling prawn and the non drippable meatpie .

    • @jimlofts5433
      @jimlofts5433 Год назад

      the footlong Condom has been discontinued in western australia as it is too small

    • @alexradojkovic9671
      @alexradojkovic9671 Год назад +2

      😆

    • @c8Lorraine1
      @c8Lorraine1 Год назад +1

      👍👍👍👍👍👍🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺

    • @ianbell735
      @ianbell735 Год назад +4

      Knacker laquer🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣👍👍👍👍

    • @kenphillips7594
      @kenphillips7594 Год назад +5

      And our clever indigenous folks refused to invent the wheel, or how to create fire or agriculture and cities. Sometimes, when I look at our current problems, I think that they were onto something.

  • @Twopennysau
    @Twopennysau Год назад +3

    To add a couple more - we invented 3D radar (Interscan) that is used in every airport in the world - and also the first 3D sonar system (Mulloka).

    • @Twopennysau
      @Twopennysau Год назад

      PS it’s NOT true we invented wifi - what we did was work out how to filter it so it could be used in practical applications - just to be clear 😊

    • @c8Lorraine1
      @c8Lorraine1 Год назад

      We did pat

  • @johnnicholls5344
    @johnnicholls5344 Год назад +1

    Here's something not many people know about...
    "Most prominently, Adelaide became the starting point for William Bragg and his son Lawrence to share the 1915 Nobel Prize physics prize for their work in X-ray spectra, X-ray diffraction and crystal structure."
    By the 1950s, X-ray cystallography was used in the UK to determine the structure of DNA.
    Lawrence Bragg was born and raised in Adelaide, South Australia. He and his father worked together in Adelaide on X ray diffraction before moving to the UK to continue their research work.

  • @theghost6412
    @theghost6412 Год назад +17

    Thomas Angove, a winemaker from Renmark, South Australia was the one to create Casked Wine. Instead of using barrels or bottles, he created the Cask Bags for wine.

    • @c8Lorraine1
      @c8Lorraine1 Год назад

      Polymer casks.

    • @alanmacpherson3225
      @alanmacpherson3225 Год назад +3

      Ah the mighty goon bag.

    • @victoriagill1588
      @victoriagill1588 Год назад +1

      Australia also created a lot of technology that is now used worldwide with vat controlled fermentation for wine and the screw top wine bottle (because the french were keeping the good cork for themselves)

  • @jimlofts5433
    @jimlofts5433 Год назад +23

    Australia invented and patented the worlds first electric Iron - from tasmania

    • @ianyoung9539
      @ianyoung9539 Год назад +2

      Birchalls the stationery store invented note pads with gummed spines, in Launceston.

    • @bernadettelanders7306
      @bernadettelanders7306 7 месяцев назад

      @@ianyoung9539
      That’s one of my favourites lol it’s just so brilliantly simple that’s used by so many.
      Love and admire our other inventions as well of course 😊

  • @suelynch
    @suelynch Год назад +40

    Yes to the absolute horror to Americans, an Aussie invented the electric drill. There are a lot of "Merican's" who believe Aussies are backward barbarians the beat each other over the head with clubs.
    There is a bearing which was invented back in the early 1900's which are still used today. They are used in super heavy duty machinery. Some of the first bearings made are still in operation today.
    I think we also came up with the flying fox camera system used in the game of cricket.
    The one I find the best is the Hill Hoist Clothes Line.

    • @6226superhurricane
      @6226superhurricane Год назад +10

      mitchell thrust block bearing.

    • @suelynch
      @suelynch Год назад

      @@6226superhurricane Thank you. I couldn't remember the name.

    • @holdenboy02
      @holdenboy02 Год назад

      backyard cricket , lol.

    • @1337flite
      @1337flite Год назад

      @@jen9996 My Nan worked at Hills packing either ironing boards or clothes lines and won an award for inventing a more efficient way of packing products - this was like in the 60s or there 'bouts.

    • @paulgerrard9227
      @paulgerrard9227 Год назад

      Black and Decker Australia. It was an aussie but a us company that built the electric hand drill

  • @djollosaustralia7971
    @djollosaustralia7971 Год назад +4

    The first military tank was invented by an Aussie, but because our military came under the British umbrella, they took credit for it. Also, the first modern submarine vessel was an Australian concept.

    • @garrymuir1442
      @garrymuir1442 3 месяца назад

      I had thought the sub belong to Dutch/German origins?

  • @petemedium2185
    @petemedium2185 Год назад +12

    While Alexander Fleming is often credited with discovering penicillin in 1928, Howard Walter Florey oversaw initial clinical trials and led the team that first produced large quantities of this antibiotic, which played an important role in the Allied victory in World War II.

    • @petesmitt
      @petesmitt Год назад

      Florey was of English heritage.

    • @petemedium2185
      @petemedium2185 Год назад

      @@petesmitt Australia was British until 1988, so technically, you're right.

  • @franmal1724
    @franmal1724 Год назад +4

    Howard Florey, as has already been pointed out actually refined the penicillin. He used the Aussie soldiers in the Middle East during the war to test out the dosages. My father had shrapnel wounds and he was one of his test subjects.

  • @jimlofts5433
    @jimlofts5433 Год назад +4

    the victa rotary lawn mower and the Hills rotary clothes dryer, the plastic baskets for growing oysters, the thompson coupler, the Mchitch towing coupler

    • @TheGonnagle
      @TheGonnagle Год назад +1

      Except that Hill didn't invent the rotary hoist

    • @jimlofts5433
      @jimlofts5433 Год назад +1

      @@TheGonnagle yeh but just saying rotary clothes hoist dryer I didn't think people would know what it was - but who did invent the hoist. I should and did know - might come in handy at a quiz night

    • @c8Lorraine1
      @c8Lorraine1 Год назад +1

      It was invented in S.A

  • @slipoch6635
    @slipoch6635 Год назад +2

    Some more information:
    When the black box was first mass-produced the American government said they would not allow any plane with a black box to fly over any part of the USA unless the tech was given away for free.
    We also had the first city in the southern hemisphere with electric street lighting (Tamworth)
    About 2 - 10 years after the world's first hydroelectric dam was built we had 2 operating in Gara Gorge near Armidale and another bunch being built, some of which powered towns and large mining operations (late 1800's, early 1900's).
    The first solar panels were also developed in Armidale, but the government owned the tech (through a university) and blew all the money they had allocated on commercialising it on 'admin' costs, the inventor then offered to buy the patent from the government which refused to sell it, so he went back to china (where patents are pointless) and took his 2 colleagues with him and he is now worth ~$30 billion.
    We have just developed a solar panel that does not require silver in Australia, instead using copper. it is also the most efficient panel built in the world so far (yet to be in commercial production).
    Consistant street signing (give way, stop signs etc.) is also an Australian invention.
    Re: Penecillian - I believe he was australian born and living in scotland? maybe 2 different inventions like you said.
    Re: wifi - A few years ago Apple decided it didn't want to pay the patent fee for wifi (which amounts to like 5c per chip), so they contacted Qualcomm and both of them just stopped paying, Apple did try to get others on board saying the costs were onerous, which amounts to conspiracy to defraud, but they lost that case and nothing more came of it.
    In Tamworth the first multi-cd selector/player was invented for radio stations, but the company didn't see any value in it so didn't bother to patent it. This predated the first Japanese units by ~5 years.
    The periscope was first invented in WW1 by Australians to look over the top of trenches.
    Also the goon bag (cask wine) was invented here :)
    Hills hoist clothesline
    Electric Refrigeration
    My family may have the first example of a shearing shed with animal pens underneath it (it's going to get flooded out by the dam expansion in the next 10 years)

  • @debwhite7629
    @debwhite7629 10 месяцев назад +1

    Australians have been great in the medical field- Professor Ian Frazer, a (Scottish born) Australian, was the inventor of a vaccine against human papillomavirus (HPV), the infection that causes cervical cancer. Barry J. Marshall and Robin Warren, two Australian researchers discovered the bacterium Helicobacter pylori and deciphered its role in gastritis and peptic ulcer disease meaning treatment is now via antibiotics and not surgery. Dr Fiona Wood (British born) AO is an Australian plastic surgeon who invented “spray-on skin” technology for use in treating burn victims. Professor Graeme Clark AC pioneered one of Australia’s greatest bioengineering achievements, the multi-channel cochlear implant, the first device to allow severely-to-profoundly deaf people to understand speech.

  • @debkendall
    @debkendall Год назад +2

    Cochlear implant, Time reference scanning - for landing aeroplanes, spray on skin for burn victims, pacemaker, hendra virus vaccine, mechanical sheep sharing clippers, many and varied types of inventions

  • @bernadettelanders7306
    @bernadettelanders7306 Год назад +11

    Mat did you know how the world saw Man first walk on the moon? Beamed via our Aus huge telescope dishes. Interesting doco why - in PARKES NSW and um was It Honeysuckle Creek?
    Theres are more inventions but not on RUclips. I found a list of 60 Aussie inventions in google. One reviewer did it, he just scrolled down the google page.
    - There is one some disagree on, wifi, there were types of it but not what we all use today. Great doco on RUclips Re CSIRO WIFI with the Engineers & scientists talking about how they achieved what we all use now. Oh there were court cases over who did what for years I think, Aus won the case. (Sydney born, Australian engineer by the name of John O'Sullivan, led to the invention of wireless Internet) it had something to do with space, some thing to do with Black holes in the universe. I need a refresher lol

    • @scraverX
      @scraverX Год назад +3

      Yes, Honeysuckle Creek is just outside Canberra, not much left there now. Was a NASA facility.

  • @TheAussieLeo
    @TheAussieLeo Год назад +3

    A lot of Aussies have (and are proud to have) Scottish heritage. It is not rare to go to an Australian wedding and have Groom and Men in kilts.
    [EDIT:]
    In australia we take care of the bairns, til 16 all medical care can be bulk billed and medication is subsidised (much like the NHS but faster)

  • @kcrot2566
    @kcrot2566 Год назад +14

    Australians are great inventors hardship creates great people 💕

    • @toni4729
      @toni4729 Год назад +1

      And some nongs

    • @ingridclare7411
      @ingridclare7411 Год назад +1

      @@toni4729 Hahaha. There are always nongs, wherever in the world you go.

  • @ReHerakhte
    @ReHerakhte Год назад +2

    Modern atomic absorption spectroscopy (AAS) was developed by Australian chemists working for CSIRO in the 1950s.

  • @TerryT304
    @TerryT304 Год назад +2

    Originally Racecam required a Helicopter to be hovering overhead of the cars at the Bathurst 1000

  • @Elriuhilu
    @Elriuhilu 11 месяцев назад +1

    A scientist at the CSIRO in the fifties invented atomic absorption spectroscopy (emission spectroscopy had already been a thing for a very long time, but it doesn't have the same applications). The idea led to development of instruments that can accurately identify substances, or that substances are missing where they should be and very quickly became useful in testing for contamination and in medicine to check if a person was deficient in some nutrient.

  • @RodneyMcMinge
    @RodneyMcMinge Год назад +6

    The aviation and wifi relate to the vastness of the land and how much we have to travel. We fly a lot. In relation to the proximity of the rest of the world, we have to. We're pretty used to long distances.

  • @yesterdayschunda1760
    @yesterdayschunda1760 Год назад +7

    Racecam is freaking epic, during the race the commentators will have conversations with the drivers while you are watching from inside the car like say a crash happens then they discuss who was at fault with the drivers lol

    • @janemcdonald5372
      @janemcdonald5372 Год назад

      Back in the early days, Channel 7 hoped nothing major happened in Sydney during the weekend of the Bathurst race because pretty much all of their cameras were set up around the Mt Panorama track.

  • @ACDZ123
    @ACDZ123 Год назад +7

    🇦🇺 invented dim sims and chiko rolls 😋

  • @brissiemum2
    @brissiemum2 Год назад +3

    I think Australian scientists pioneered IVF, too. Could be wrong but I’m old enough to vaguely remember hearing that somewhere.

  • @bernadettelanders7306
    @bernadettelanders7306 Год назад +14

    Ah, yes Scotland invented TV. John Logie Baird. In Australia our TV awards are called LOGIE awards 😊

  • @TheMadSparrow
    @TheMadSparrow Год назад +1

    7:02 Penicillin was first discovered accidentally by Alexander Fleming (who is Scottish), then during WWII was made into a usable medicine by Aussies

  • @tropicaussie4572
    @tropicaussie4572 Год назад +2

    The population is approximately 26 MILLION now . The reason the population is relatively small in comparison to its geographic size is that two thirds of Australia is hot arid dry busted ass desert .
    Australia is definitely a world leader in medical research !

  • @jayweb51
    @jayweb51 11 месяцев назад +2

    Although Hills Industries from South Australia were the first to commercially manufacture the rotary clothes hoist, it was in fact invented by Gilbert Toyne and Lambert Downey from Melbourne, Victoria.

    • @garrymuir1442
      @garrymuir1442 3 месяца назад

      Whom if memory serves correct, Downey let the Patent lapse and Hills took the opportunity to grab it

  • @69GT5
    @69GT5 Год назад +6

    Heya mate. Just some more kewl aussie inventions. #1 is the Refridgerator???? Torpedo, Tank (yes boom boom tank), Periscope rifle, Pace maker (heart), Aspro, car radio, UTE (tray on back of car), Latex gloves, just to name a few good ones😁👍🤣

  • @jawannacuputty
    @jawannacuputty Год назад +2

    I knew about most of these. Regarding penicillin, in 1928 Alexander Fleming noted the effect of mould but didn't persue it. The drug was made medically useful in the 1940s by a team of Oxford scientists led by Australian Howard Florey and German refugee Ernst Chain.

  • @ianwhite1858
    @ianwhite1858 Год назад +7

    The Scott's invented heaps of stuff but the one that has saved more lives than any single other invention is the Saline Drip

    • @toni4729
      @toni4729 Год назад +1

      Is it my imagination or it just a plastic bag of salt water?

    • @kathleenmayhorne3183
      @kathleenmayhorne3183 9 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@toni4729a sterile bag or bottle that has saved countless human and animal lives. The invention as a good use of his time, like the wheel, if he didn't invent it, somebody would have, kudos for getting to be first, because it was sorely needed. And how many things have been invented after, to make it easier to use? A lot of brilliant inventions, rely on things that came before.

    • @debbiejefford5187
      @debbiejefford5187 19 дней назад +1

      @@toni4729 lol saline helps people in so many ways, balancing, hydrating...and overall helping the circulatory and lymphatic systems that we definitely need operating at their best...I love the humour tho.

  • @the-flatulator
    @the-flatulator Год назад +1

    Penicillin was discovered in Scotland, however, it was an Australian who purified it the useful product it is today. Both the Scottish (Fleming) and the aussie (Florey) shared a Nobel Prize for it. For country with only a handful of people we certainly hold our own in the world of inventions.

  • @simbob26
    @simbob26 Год назад +8

    There are too many to mention.
    You are right to split the discovery and implementation of penicillin to both Scotland and Australia, but you should probably also add Germany/England to the list. Fleming was the original discoverer, but was unable to produce it in anything like a useful quantity. Florey (Australian) and Chain (German born English) were the two most responsible for making penicillin useful. That is why the Nobel Prize was shared between them.

  • @kcrot2566
    @kcrot2566 Год назад +4

    I’m happy to share our inventions Irish Scottish Welsh ancestors 💕

  • @MrBroady02
    @MrBroady02 Год назад +1

    Not only did Australia invent polymer bank notes, they manufacture them for other countries.

  • @cathryncavaney5070
    @cathryncavaney5070 Год назад

    Cochlear implant, 8 hour work day, "goon bag", stump jump plough, water saving dual flush toilet. FYI Howard Walter Florey, Baron Florey OM FRS FRCP (24 September 1898 - 21 February 1968) was an Australian pharmacologist and pathologist who shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1945 with Ernst Chain and Sir Alexander Fleming for his role in the development of penicillin.

  • @davidanderson4876
    @davidanderson4876 Год назад

    Fleming discovered the penicillium bacteria, wrote a paper, and filed it. The team led by Florey with Chain and Heatley turned the discovery into antibiotics. The Australia professor of medicine at Oxford University in a speech famously noted "Without Fleming, no Chain or Florey; without Florey, no Heatley; without Heatley, no penicillin."

  • @TheMadSparrow
    @TheMadSparrow Год назад +1

    8:34 “I had no idea Wifi was invented” 😂

  • @elizabethscott7660
    @elizabethscott7660 Год назад +9

    We're a resourceful bunch. If we need something we invent it.

    • @toni4729
      @toni4729 Год назад

      Another expert: What? Who?

    • @Lolliegoth
      @Lolliegoth 10 месяцев назад

      @@toni4729 Be nice

  • @elizabethanderton-rg2gd
    @elizabethanderton-rg2gd Год назад +3

    Lets not forget the Hills hoist, lawnmower, refrigeration and the bionic ear. They are currently working on a bionic eye.

  • @redwarpy
    @redwarpy Год назад +1

    My Mum worked for Ausonics she put together the components and was used to test out the machines.

  • @0Zolrender0
    @0Zolrender0 Год назад +3

    We might be a small country... but in everything we do we punch above our weight. BTW.. your accent is bloody awesome.

  • @Darryl_Frost
    @Darryl_Frost Год назад +7

    Cochlea ear implants, stump jump plow, lawn mover, there are a few.

  • @lukemurphy5434
    @lukemurphy5434 Год назад +1

    It has bits and pieces , but the mechanical grain harvester developed for broad acre farming in Australia.

  • @davidcronk64
    @davidcronk64 Год назад +1

    This list is just from my State (South Australia) alone some might be in collaboration with others.
    1. Rotary Clothes Line
    2. Stobie Pole
    3. Sunburn Cream
    4. Torrens Land Title System
    5. Plastic Toilet Cistern
    6. Electoral Secret Ballots
    7. Plastic Spectacle Lenses
    8. Plastic Air Conditioners
    9. Electro Convulsive Therapy
    10. Stump Jump Plough
    11. Ridley Stripper Harvester
    12. Tank Bred Tuna System
    13. The Big E Harvester
    14. The Plastic Wine Cask
    15. Chicken Salt
    Also from SA are Howard Florey and Sir Mark Oliphant who worked on the project to develop radar and worked on electromagnetic isotope separation which makes atomic bombs work.

    • @johnnicholls5344
      @johnnicholls5344 Год назад

      Dont forget the Braggs...
      "Most prominently, Adelaide became the starting point for William Bragg and his son Lawrence to share the 1915 Nobel Prize physics prize for their work in X-ray spectra, X-ray diffraction and crystal structure."

  • @who-gives-a-toss_Bear
    @who-gives-a-toss_Bear Год назад +1

    Arthur James Arnot (26 August 1865 - 15 October 1946) was a Scottish electrical engineer and inventor, best known for patenting the world's first electric drill when he was in Australia.

  • @JohnPittaway
    @JohnPittaway Год назад +3

    I reckon the rotary clothes line & the rotary lawn mower should have got a mention, then there's the stump jump plough, the Phillips screw head, the portable threshing machine, the lathe cutting tool which allowed unskilled workers to use lathes in manufacturing, the metal alloy that melts at 100 deg. C, used to fill thin wall tubing so it could be bent without distortion, also used on Diesel tank caps to prevent the tanks exploding in a fire, the star picket fence post and I'm sure a few more will come to me later!

  • @FionaEm
    @FionaEm Год назад +5

    Australia's population is a bit higher now, at 26 million. I knew about most of these inventions, but had forgotten about the electric drill. Without it, we'd still be living in basic wattle & daub huts! Purifying penicillin for widespread use was obviously huge, too, given how many lives it has saved over the years.

    • @Nathan-ry3yu
      @Nathan-ry3yu Год назад

      26.6 million to be exactly. Just have to type in Australian population live clock on the internet it will tell you birth for the day. Migration for the day. Deaths for the day and current population

  • @6226superhurricane
    @6226superhurricane Год назад +3

    a lot of aussie inventions were by scottish australians like james harrison that invented the first vapor compression refrigerator and built the first commercial ice makers.
    penicillin was discovered by alexander flemming but he had no way of producing it in usable quantities howard florey figured out how to grow it and refine it in usable quantities and was the first to treat people with it.

  • @jennyreilly1151
    @jennyreilly1151 Год назад +5

    Being isolated we have to be pro active in many things to move forward.... Can't wait on the rest of the 🌏
    We are an awesome bunch when you get to know us ✋😉
    As other comments advise there are many more inventions we are proud of 🇦🇺🇦🇺 💙

  • @069diesel069
    @069diesel069 Год назад +1

    Also Aussie inventions, frefridgerated beef in ships and THE BLACK BOX RECORDER🇦🇺👍🏽

  • @LightFigure888
    @LightFigure888 Год назад +1

    The cochlear implant for assisting people to hear. You could probably do a whole episode on Australian Medical innovations. We are a clever mob. I did know about all but the electric drill. & I don’t know if it an urban legend or not, but my Dad tells me every time one is mentioned.....the black boxes are actually orange....you know for hi-vis

  • @doubledee9675
    @doubledee9675 7 месяцев назад

    The bank notes were designed to be very easy to distinguish one from another. They are different sizes and the colours are especially bright, with different colours for the different values.

  • @kathleenmayhorne3183
    @kathleenmayhorne3183 Год назад +7

    Don't worry about us in comparison to Scotland, we have a lot of scots immigrants in the family trees, including 3 of my grandparents. It just takes a good reason and a mechanical, engineer, or scientific brain, or a mixture of those talents. A lot of people invent things in their back-yard sheds, nowadays called the man-cave.. though nowadays a lot of them are bars with big sports tellies and no tools, or car sheds, full of rusty parts and tools.

    • @utha2665
      @utha2665 Год назад +2

      Yes, the big one being the steam engine, James Watt. The pneumatic tyre, pedal bicycle, overhead valve engine, to name a few. Here's one that will upset a few of us Aussies, AFL with many innovations in the early evolution of the game and Scots were founders of the Essendon Football Club.
      The list is far too long to list them all, here's the wiki link.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Scottish_inventions_and_discoveries

  • @Bellas1717
    @Bellas1717 Год назад +14

    Many of the polymer bank notes used around the world have been manufactured and supplied by Australia.

    • @leglessinoz
      @leglessinoz Год назад +1

      All of the other countries use tech licensed by an Australian company to make their polymer notes.

    • @Bellas1717
      @Bellas1717 Год назад

      @@leglessinoz Yes, they do now. My comment was referencing the seventeen countries that started with Australia manufacturing and supplying through NPA, prior to licensing to manufacture their notes for themselves being handed over.

    • @cgkennedy
      @cgkennedy Год назад +1

      The USA scientists wanted the technology for the polymer notes free of charge. Reserve Bank and CSIRO said no. That's why they went for water hungry technology for cotton notes.

    • @debbiejefford5187
      @debbiejefford5187 19 дней назад

      @@cgkennedy that is the second time I have read that...the USA wanting technology for free....why? Would they ever hand anything over for "free"? They are a capitalist nation that routinely overcharges their citizens especially in medicine.

  • @c8Lorraine1
    @c8Lorraine1 Год назад +2

    ALL polymer bank notes across the world are made at the Australian Mint

    • @yonkers01
      @yonkers01 Год назад +1

      The bank notes are made in Craigieburn Victoria by a subsidiary of the Reserve Bank of Australia. The bank does the notes and the mint does the coins.

  • @PiersDJackson
    @PiersDJackson Год назад

    As a scot, important inventions are: Cochlear Implant (aka Bionic Ear), wine cask / boxed wine (aka Goon Bag), Rotary Lawnmower, Rotary Clothesline, Stump-jump Plow, the over-horizon radar, spray on skin, plastic lens glasses, multifocal glasses, Winged Keel in sailing.

    • @trueaussie9230
      @trueaussie9230 Год назад

      Before the USA had fully tested its 'invisible to radar' Stealth Bomber, Aus had perfected the Over The Horizon RADAR that can 'see' it.

  • @jemxs
    @jemxs Год назад +5

    We also invented the fridge! As for WiFi, I think we made it usable rather than invented it!

    • @slipoch6635
      @slipoch6635 Год назад +1

      No it was invented by a bunch of guys working at the astronomic telescopes, they were looking at something (quasars I think) that they initially thought might be some kind of communication. They tested the concept and then patented it with CSIRO, Stanford or MIT then took the patent and added some of the standards to it.

  • @dennisheape971
    @dennisheape971 Год назад

    An Aussie, David Warren was the one who invented the "Flight Data" recorder and the " Flight Voice recorder." (Black Boxes)

  • @akitas8165
    @akitas8165 Год назад +1

    Actually we did not invent the flight recorder. The first such instruments were used by the French in 1939. It was in 1953 that the Australian guy commercialised the idea and incorporated a voice recorder. (Up to that time they only recorded instrument readings.) Also, Florey did not "discover" penicillin, he simply developed a better way to use it.

  • @toondeath5450
    @toondeath5450 Год назад +1

    Im Aussie and loving these videos man, keep goin with your channel you're good at it. Just extra info the Aussie money is waterproof, very hard to tear or rip, and very very difficult to counterfeit i think that is the biggest benefit of the polymer note. The new ones have see through sections and holograms that are impossible to reproduce on a printer.
    I definitely didnt know a lot of these

  • @cyberwaste
    @cyberwaste Год назад +3

    The CSIRO is seriously impressive and important. Unfortunately they have to deal with politicians and politics interfering with funding and research focus.

    • @kathleenmayhorne3183
      @kathleenmayhorne3183 9 месяцев назад

      Like the guy who invented the computer run solar dome, who Johnny Howard shortsightedly sent overseas.

  • @philip4193
    @philip4193 Год назад +2

    Many other important Aussie medical inventions too; the pacemaker, CPAP machines, spray-on skin, bionic ear implants (Cochlear), plastic spectacle lenses, cervical cancer vaccines (Gardasil/Cervarix). And also a few extremely important to us Aussies who like a drink & to spend time outdoors: the refrigerator, rotary-blade lawnmower (ie: the Victa), the Hils Hoist rotary clothesline, plastic wine cask (aka: "goon bag"), the stubby holder (beverage cooler), saltwater pool chlorinator, the surf ski just to name a few. We are even environmental champions on par with the likes of Greta Thunberg by inventing the edible/biodegradable six-pack ring holder, so that we can continue to drink tinnies of VB by the beach and save our endangered marine life at the same time!

  • @basilpunton5702
    @basilpunton5702 Год назад

    SRS Airbag. The yank airbag is dangerous for people wearing seatbelts. So in Australia the Seat-Belt Restrain System was designed. All Australians wear seatbelts while travelling in cars. At the same time the designers developed the first seamless airbag. More lives are saved by this than most things mentioned in the video.

  • @majorlaff8682
    @majorlaff8682 Год назад +3

    The long weekend for any excuse, a public holiday for a third-rate horse race, another public holiday for the monarch's birthday which is not held on his/her birthday, and yet another public holiday to celebrate the country's name: Australia Day, sickies to go watch the cricket, four weeks annual leave, long-service leave, holiday leave loading (more pay for being off than for being at work). There's probably more.

    • @lindalee-brown5539
      @lindalee-brown5539 Год назад

      In Victoria Dan Andrews declared the day BEFORE the AFL grand final a public holiday. 🤷🏻‍♀️

  • @jayweb51
    @jayweb51 11 месяцев назад

    Yes, penicillin was discovered by Alexander Fleming, a Scottish physician-scientist; but Australian pharmacologist-pathologist actually purified penicillin for medical use.

  • @peterlinsley4287
    @peterlinsley4287 Год назад +1

    The rotary cloths line and the rotary lawnmower.

  • @meghanvidler9147
    @meghanvidler9147 Год назад +1

    The penicillin one - we didn’t discover penicillin but improved it and the delivery method.
    One of the more important ones not mentioned here is the jaws of life for cutting people out of cars. Oh we also invented the rotary clothesline and corrugated fencing - less important but still used worldwide.

  • @ChannelReuploads9451
    @ChannelReuploads9451 Год назад

    WIFI's problem was succeptibility to noise and RF echo's, but the CSIRO also had experts in Radio astronomy, more precisely, technology to filter noise, and RF echoing. Yes, they still get royalties to this day.

  • @AUmarcus
    @AUmarcus 12 дней назад

    David Warren invented the FDR and CVR....Cockpit Voice Recorder. Qantas actually named one of their a380's after him.

  • @sharyndoyle6362
    @sharyndoyle6362 Год назад

    The things that the Scottish have invented is amazing and I'm an Aussie and love it.

  • @sueaddison9958
    @sueaddison9958 Год назад

    They didn't mention the Hills Hoist, the lawn mower or most importantly the Cochlear implant! 🤔🙄😊🌏🪐🌕🙏🐦🇦🇺🦋👣🌸🌞🍂🏡🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹

  • @WireWeHere
    @WireWeHere Год назад

    Colour television goes back to 1926 in Scotland. I was parked in a corner of the classroom in 1968 for telling my grade 2 classmates we got a colour TV on the weekend. Cut me off before I got to mentioning what Saturday morning cartoons were like. In protest I collected a little surprise information and then sat in the corner again before insisting I was right. Next I practiced pulling my hands back and the teacher learned what a yard stick feels like. She never got a hit and quit after 3 attempts. Her letter home got me Mom involved and all was apologized for in writing. Two years later the strap as a optional punishment was abolished locally. We heard a rumour the strap and yardstick were demonstrated at a school board meeting on Red Hands McTavish but we can't be sure how how they got that way since we never heard her name before..

  • @MASSspec1990
    @MASSspec1990 Год назад +1

    We also invented a bunch of agricultural equipment that the entire world relies on these days. The rotary and stripper headers were both invented here.

  • @mariongordon4199
    @mariongordon4199 Год назад

    He would probably understood the baby capsule one better if the picture had been of a baby capsule, rather than a child’s car seat lol

  • @1337flite
    @1337flite Год назад

    With penicillin I believe Fleming noticed that it killed bacteria, but Florey worked out how to extract it and make it into a usable medicine.

  • @djgrant8761
    @djgrant8761 Год назад

    Australian-born Professor Graeme Clark invented the Multi-channel Cochlear Implant aka the Bionic ear which has provided sound to deaf children and adults.

  • @itsamindgame9198
    @itsamindgame9198 Год назад

    Sire Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin in 1928, but nobody had come up with a safe, effective medicinal form until Howard Florey, Ernst Chain and their team started working on it about 1939 and by 1942 were able to produced concentrated medicinal penicillin. Fleming, Florey and Chain shared a Nobel prize for it.